Publication | Closed Access
Hope, Life, and Death: A Qualitative Analysis of Dying Cancer Patients' Talk About Hope
136
Citations
54
References
2009
Year
NursingQuality Of LifePalliative CareFamily MedicineOncologyQualitative AnalysisEnd-of-life CareHealth CommunicationEnd-of-life IssueValue PatientsEnd-of-life Decision-makingDeath EducationTerminal IllnessCancer PatientsArtsMedicineHospice
Although deemed vital to patient well-being, hope in persons who are terminally ill is often thought to be problematic, particularly when centered on cure. As part of a study on end-of-life decision-making, we asked 28 patients with cancer, believed to be within weeks of their death, to talk about hope. Responses were transcribed and discursively analyzed, with 3 versions of hope, each of which connected hope and life, identified--hope as essential to, and for, life; hope, life, death, and others; and, hope/s changing during (or in) life. Hope for cure was common. Rather than death-denying, patients' hope appeared life-affirming, functioning to value patients, their lives, and connections with others.
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